Ed Miliband and David Cameron
The Conservatives are focusing on tax and Labour on the NHS as campaigning returns to traditional territory with three days left before the polls open.
David Cameron will push policies he claims cut tax for 30 million people, saying voters have an "inescapable choice" between him or Ed Miliband.
The Labour leader says people face "no bigger choice" than on the NHS and that the Tories want more privatisation.
The Lib Dems pledge to invest fines for bank rate-rigging in health equipment.
Leader Nick Clegg will set out plans to spend the £227m fine imposed on Deutsche Bank on "high-value" machinery, such as CT and MRI scanners, and on air ambulance charities.
In other election news:
  • UKIP will launch its Scottish manifesto with a call for a UK-wide constitutional convention
  • Scotland's party leaders have clashed over public spending cuts in a BBC debate
  • Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood says her party would be prepared to vote against a Labour budget, saying Ed Miliband cannot take its support "for granted"
  • Mr Clegg and Mr Miliband will appear at a Q&A session run by community campaign charity Citizens UK, to be attended by 2,300 people. Sajid Javid stands in for Mr Cameron at the event.
  • Green Party leader Natalie Bennett is giving a speech on immigration
The main parties are seeking to drive home their central messages, with Mr Cameron highlighting a pledge to raise the point at which people start paying income tax and saying the Conservatives offer "a strong economy and a brighter future".
He will tell a party rally that Labour would be unable to govern without support from the SNP, which polls suggest could make widespread gains in Scotland.
"By Friday you'll either have Ed Miliband or me as your prime minister," he will say.
"It's that simple - an inescapable choice: me leading a strong and stable government, or with him: the chaos of being held to ransom by the SNP."
    Mr Miliband will call on the Conservatives to "come clean" on plans for the NHS, claiming they would implement further reorganisation of services and more private sector involvement.
"We know that if David Cameron wins a second term there will be a drive for more privatisation, more broken promises and more people waiting longer for treatment," he will say.
Nick Clegg
Nick Clegg will say the investment in new MRI scanners shows his party's commitment to the NHS
"There is no bigger choice at this election than the future direction of our National Health Service, the bedrock of security for so many working people in our country."
The Conservatives say Labour have not committed to spending the extra £8bn a year which NHS England says it needs by 2020.
Meanwhile, Nick Clegg will say the Lib Dems would spend £177m of Deutsche Bank's fine for rigging the inter-bank Libor rate on "a major equipment fund" for treatment and diagnosis of serious conditions such as cancer and strokes, with £50m being split between 20 air ambulance organisations.
England would get £148m of the overall funding while Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland would get £15m, £8.6m and £5m respectively.
"When banks are fined, it is only right we use the money to improve vital public services and fund the organisations that do so much to build a fairer society," he will say.

'Second election'

Opinion polls currently suggest no party will win an outright victory and another hung parliament is likely.
If that is the case, the parties will have to negotiate among themselves to form a government that would be able command the support of MPs in the House of Commons, ahead of the Queen's Speech on 27 May.
Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood said she was "staggered" that Labour believed it could count on their support and that of other parties in such a scenario.
"If Labour want our support to run a government effectively they need to take on board some of the things that we are saying. It's arrogant of them to just assume that they can just take our votes without giving anything back in return," she told Radio 4's Today programme.
She added: "We would be prepared to vote down a Budget by Labour if it was pushing, putting forward, more cuts on the backs of the poor."
And former Chancellor Ken Clarke warned against those thinking the answer to an inconclusive result would be to hold another election later this year.
"You can get out of a hung parliament by having a second election but, not surprisingly, the public tends to return a parliament which looks rather like the first one," he told the Guardian.

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